Post Scriptum
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.1808-8139.v0i9p59-62Keywords:
citizenship, republic^i2^srepublican, political practices, nation, Spanish America, political representationsAbstract
The purpose of these pages is to continue the dialogue started by Miriam Dolhnikoff's and Bernardo Ricupero's commentaries to my essay on "Popular Sovereignty, Citizenship, and Nation-Building in Nineteenth Century Spanish America: The Republican Experiment". I will not try here to cover the vast field opened by their thoughtful reflections and remarks, but rather to advance in the discussion of four of the themes they raise: the comparison between the political experience of the Hispanic-American republics and that of the Brazilian constitutional monarchy; the contrast between the history of citizenship in Spanish America and that of several European countries, and the relevance of Marshall's model of citizenship to the Latin American case; the development of specific political practices, particularly those pertaining to elections; and the process of formation and transformation of the political elites in the course of the nineteenth century.Downloads
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Published
2009-05-01
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